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One Poem by Elizabeth Poliner

Pickard Field, Brunswick, Maine

for Paul Hazelton, in memoriam
  

The field was so big
that we mistook it

for a green ocean
and sat our blanket

upon its cushion
of mowed grass

and had our lunch
on the ocean

(rather than by it,
just miles away,

as planned). PB&Js for all,
and the blue sky

and the mystery
of the expansiveness

on which we sat,
upon which we gazed,

expansiveness
in all directions. We felt

lucky, happy, even
big. Paul, who was dying,

rolled his eyes when I
reported back. PB&Js?

The college’s playing fields?
Utter perfection, is that

what you said?
But it was just this kind

of gathering, spontaneous,
modest, a blanket,

a nearby field, sandwiches
simple as all that,

that would have giddied him,
had he been younger then

and well. We were young,
or young enough,

and well in the ways
of those who can’t yet see

how all can change
quick as lightning,

the whole field
crackling, already dry

from the expansive,
expanding,

heat waves to come,
how could we know

this softness,
this cushioned world,

would never last?

     

    

    

Elizabeth PolinerElizabeth Poliner’s books include the poetry collection What You Know in Your Hands (David Robert Books),and the novels Spinning at the Edges (just out from Harper) and As Close to Us as Breathing (Little, Brown & Co.), winner of the Janet Heidinger Kafka Prize in Fiction. Her poems have appeared in The Sun, The Southern Review, The Hopkins Review, On the Seawall, and Vita Poetica, among other journals.

Header photo by S_Photo, courtesy Shutterstock.